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Exclusive: 2Pac Exposes Shocking True Feelings on John Singleton, Jim Be...
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Tupac Shakur expresses his views on John Belushi, John Singleton, and Tim Roth in this audio recording
#2pac#tim roth#tupac#jim belushi#tupac shakur#john singleton#bomb 1st#makaveli#all eyez on me#me against the world#Youtube#strictly 4 my n.i.g.g.a.z...#2pacalypsenow#diddy#jay z#eminem#dr dre#kendrick lamar#drake#50 cent#the diddler#akil the mc#devon clark#september 7 1996#september 13th 1996#orlando anderson#lil half dead#snoop dogg#dogg pound#suge knight
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Arthur Lake-Penny Singleton-Larry Simms-Cliff Clark "Blondie in society" 1941, de Frank R. Strayer.
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Lost, but Not Forgotten: Two Kinds of Women (1922)
Alternate Title: Judith of Blue Lake Ranch
Direction: Colin Campbell & George C. Bertholon (assistant)
Adapted Scenario: Winifred Dunn
Based on: Judith of Blue Lake Ranch by Jackson Gregory (novel)
Production Manager: R.J. Tobin
Camera: Dev Jennings
Editing: Pauline Frederick (editing supervisor), Colin Campbell, & Dev Jennings
Studio: Robertson-Cole (Production & Distribution)
Performers: Pauline Frederick, Tom Santschi, Charles Clary, Dave Winter, Eugene Pallette, Billy Elmer, Jack Curtis, Jim Barley, Sam Appel, Otis Harlan, Clarissa Selwynne, Jean Calhoun, Tom Bates, Lydia Yeamans Titus, Frank Clark, Bud Sterling, Elise Collins, Joseph Singleton, & Stanhope Wheatcroft (not mentioned after release, but listed during production: L.C. Shumway)
Premiere: Opened at Loew’s State Theatre on 3 February 1922; preview screenings for reviewers in NYC, 27 January
Status: presumed entirely lost
Length: 6 reels, ~6,000 feet (a few sources say 5, most say 6)
Synopsis (synthesized from magazine summaries of the plot):
Judith Sanford (Frederick) inherits the sizable Blue Lake Ranch after the unexpected death of her father. Upon her arrival, she discovers that the ranch’s manager, Trevors (Clary), has been systematically undermining the value of the ranch. Judith confronts him, fires him, and wings him with her pistol as severance.
The horse foreman, Bud Lee (Santschi), had suspected Trevors’ dirty dealing, but questions if he can work for a woman. Regardless of his doubts, Bud respects Judith’s goals and remains loyal to the ranch.
As there are still men working on the ranch loyal to Trevors, Judith’s employees are divided. One of Trevors’ hires, Quinnion (Curtis) rebukes Judith and suggests she can’t even ride. She challenges him to bring her a horse he thinks she can’t ride. Judith successfully rides the wild broncho and Quinnion is cowed, leaving the ranch bitterly. The incident wins Judith the respect of the men, including Bud and Carson (Pallette), the cattle foreman.
Judith’s next point of action is tracking down the staff Trevors ousted, most importantly the ranch vet, Doc Tripp (Clark). Tripp returns and uncovers that disease-infected animals have been intentionally introduced to the ranch’s stock. Judith runs Trevors’ vet, Crowdy (Appel), off the ranch.
Hampton, a city boy and one-third owner of the ranch, is unhappy when he hears of Trevors’ firing and decides to pay a visit to Blue Lake. (In reality, he’s dodging his creditors.) The visiting socialites are rankled by Judith’s cowgirl togs and no-nonsense demeanor. Alternately, the ultra ladylike Marcia (Calhoun), Hampton’s fiancee, finds a new devotee in Bud.
On the night of their arrival, Judith learns that the employee she sent to collect the payroll has been robbed. Bud races to the bank overnight to return to pay the staff the following day. As Bud is on his way back, his horse is shot out from under him, but he manages to reach the ranch just in time.
That night, Bud and Judith set out to track down the bandits and recover the stolen payroll. At a cabin in the mountains, they catch the robber after a shootout and find it’s the discharged vet, Crowdy. They agree to stay overnight to guard the injured Crowdy. To pass the time, Judith pulls a book from an unexpectedly well-stocked library in the cabin and sees that the books belong to Bud! They’re interrupted when Quinnion attacks to save Crowdy and another shootout ensues.
Fortunately, Judith’s absence from the ranch was noticed by Hampton. He has mounted up with Bud’s assistant, Tommy, and they arrive in time to save the pair and manage to capture another of Trevors’ agents, Benny (Barley). Benny is locked up, but is freed overnight, meaning there are still more of Trevors’ men lurking. Bud pledges his loyalty to Judith, but then has a romantic foray with Marcia.
Despite the hubbub, the annual Blue Lake dance is held. Carson kits out the workers in suits mail-ordered from Sears-Roebuck, which they accessorise with guns and ammo belts. Bud, it turns out, has a tailored suit of his own that he unpacks and presses for the occasion. He is bewildered when he arrives at the dance and sees a perfectly feminine Judith in a fashionable Parisian gown. Fully enamored with “the real Judith,” Bud whisks her off to the porch and kisses her.
Judith is surprised to find an urgent note from Doc Tripp awaiting her after the dance. The note explains that he has uncovered another Trevors mole and has been wounded. Judith rushes to Tripp, but is waylaid and kidnapped. She manages to remove the mask from one of her abductors and it’s Trevors himself!
Three days pass. Hampton suddenly orders Carson to prepare 500 head of cattle to be sold at a loss. Immediately suspicious, Bud rides to the ranch house and is told that Judith left for San Francisco three days prior. Given Hampton’s fishy assumption of command, Bud and Carson tie him up while they investigate Judith’s real whereabouts. They discover the forged note and confirm with Tripp that he didn’t write it. With mistrust toward Hampton building, they place him under guard and ride to confront Trevors.
In all that time, Judith has been kept prisoner in the mountains by Quinnion. When Quinnion attacks her, Judith seizes an opportunity to escape, but quickly learns that her prison is set among perilous cliffs. Quinnion gives chase, they struggle, and he plummets to his death. Hopelessly lost and exhausted from her ordeal, Judith makes a last ditch effort for rescue by lighting a signal fire before losing consciousness.
Bud and Carson find Trevors and a wild fist fight breaks out. Bud trounces Trevors and Trevors is forced to leave town for good, but not before revealing where he’s hidden Judith. Bud rescues Judith and they all return to the ranch. After they have had time to recover from their respective tribulations, Bud and Judith reunite and embrace.
——— ——— ———
Points of Interest:
Pauline Frederick made 55 silent feature films in her career. Of those 55 films 45-6 of the films are presumed lost or mostly lost. [One film’s status is unclear ATM.] Of the 9 known to survive, 3 are incomplete (2 are missing at least one reel and the 3rd survives in an abridged cut). Of the surviving 9, three have had home video releases [Three Women (1924), Devil’s Island (1926), and Smouldering Fires (1925)]. Of the 6 surviving films that haven’t had home-video release, 2 have been screened publicly in the past decade [The Love the Lives (1917) and The Moment Before (1916)]. A very rough record for a big star (who didn’t spend most of their career at Fox) to only have a 16-18% survival rate.
——— ——— ———
Winifred Dunn, prolific writer from a young age working in many genres, wrote/edited 33 silent features, 20 of which are presumed lost.
——— ——— ———
Two Kinds of Women was part of the schedule of R-C Pictures’ releases for early 1922. This was a crucial moment in the history of the company, as it was soon after re-organized into F.B.O. The founders exited the company, but so did Pauline Frederick, Sessue Hayakawa, Tsuru Aoki, and Doris May—their biggest stars going into 1922.
While the contemporary critical response to TKoW was generally positive and exhibitors across the US and Canada cited good ticket sales, it didn’t leave much of a legacy. At least one contemporary critic, Laurence Reid, considered the film of decent quality but ultimately forgettable. Whether TKoW would have stood the test of time or not, we can’t know. Lost or not, I’m sure the re-organization of TKoW’s distributor affected its potential for long-term popularity. There is at least one instance from after the re-org of a theatre owner receiving a faulty print of the film. So, even by 1923, it was hard to come by a decent print of TKoW.
The reason I’m confident in placing blame on R-C/F.B.O. is that, of the slate of 20 films they released in late 1921 and early 1922, 16 are currently presumed lost and only 3 appear to be completely extant:
Lost: The Lure of Jade, The Sting of the Lash, The Foolish Age, Eden and Return, Five Days to Live, The Vermillion Pencil, A Wife’s Awakening, Silent Years, The Call of Home, The Barricade,Two Kinds of Women, Boy Crazy, Salvage, The Glory of Clementina, Gay and Devilish, and At the Stage Door Extant: Where Lights Are Low, The Swamp (would live to see this one BTW), and Beyond the Rainbow
☕Appreciate my work? Buy me a coffee! ☕
Transcribed Sources & Annotations over on the WMM Blog!
#1920s#1922#Pauline Frederick#film history#Winifred Dunn#western#silent cinema#lost film#silent era#cinema#classic cinema#classic movies#classic film#american film#film#silent film#silent movies#lost media#history#california#old hollywood
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Favorite First Time Watches of 2024
Favorite pre-2024 films watched for the first time in 2024:
All About Eve (1950) dir. Joseph L. Mankiewicz
The Battle of Algiers (1966) dir. Gillo Pontecorvo
Black Narcissus (1947) dir. Michael Powell & Emeric Pressburger
Boyz n the Hood (1991) dir. John Singleton
Chungking Express (1994) dir. Wong Kar-Wai
The Deer Hunter (1978) dir. Michael Cimino
Dr. Caligari (1989) dir. Stephen Sayadian
Donnie Darko (2001) dir. Richard Kelly
Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953) dir. Howard Hawks
The Heartbreak Kid (1972) dir. Elaine May
Heat (1995) dir. Michael Mann
The Heroic Trio (1993) dir. Johnnie To
The Hitch-Hiker (1953) dir. Ida Lupino
The Intruder (1962) dir. Roger Corman
Investigation of a Citizen Above Suspicion (1970) dir. Elio Petri
John Wick: Chapter 4 (2023) dir. Chad Stahelski
Macbeth (1948) dir. Orson Welles
May (2002) dir. Lucky McKee
Oldboy (2003) dir. Park Chan-wook
Out of Sight (1998) dir. Steven Soderbergh
Poor Things (2023) dir. Yorgos Lanthimos
Portrait of Jason (1967) dir. Shirley Clarke
Pumping Iron II: The Women (1985) dir. George Butler
Serial Mom (1994) dir. John Waters
The Seventh Juror (1962) dir. Georges Lautner
Shock Troops (1967) dir. Costa-Gavras
Southern Comfort (1981) dir. Walter Hill
Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse (2023) dir. Kemp Powers, Justin K. Thompson & Joaquim Dos Santos
#movies#2024#1950#1966#1947#1991#1994#1978#1989#2001#1953#1972#1995#1993#1962#1970#2023#1948#2002#2003#1998#1967#1985#1981#year in review
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The Copley Family
Artist: John Singleton Copley (American, 1738-1815)
Date: 1776-1777
Medium: Oil on Canvas
Collection: National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC, United States
Description
Fleeing the violence of the American Revolution, John Singleton Copley and his family settled in London in 1775. While Copley (standing at top left) tried to remain neutral, his father-in-law Richard Clarke (seated in front of the artist) supported the British. This group portrait suggests domestic harmony despite the political turmoil. The floral patterns on the rug and sofa blend smoothly into the peaceful landscape.
The Copley Family was first exhibited at the Royal Academy of Arts in London in 1777. It both raised the profile of the family in British society and advertised the artist’s remarkable skill.
#group portrait#painting#oil on canvas#family#john singleton copley#american painter#landscape#men#woman#children#drapes#mountains#lake#couch#distant hills#horizon#18th century painting#england
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Title: Whitney Houston: I Wanna Dance with Somebody
Rating: PG-13
Director: Kasi Lemmons
Cast: Naomi Ackie, Ashton Sanders, Stanley Tucci, Nafessa Williams, Lance A. Williams, Tamara Tunie, Clarke Peters, Daniel Washington, JaQuan Malik Jones, Kris Sidberry, Tanner Beard, Bailee Lopes, Jennifer Ellis, Bria Danielle Singleton, Adrian M. Mompoint, Coffey
Release year: 2022
Genres: history, music, drama
Blurb: Follow the joyous, emotional, heartbreaking celebration of the life and music of Whitney Houston, the greatest female R&B pop vocalist of all time, tracking her journey from obscurity to musical superstardom.
#whitney houston i wanna dance with somebody#pg13#kasi lemmons#naomi ackie#ashton sanders#stanley tucci#nafessa williams#lance a williams#2022#history#music#drama
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157: The Silver Mt. Zion Memorial Orchestra & Tra-La-La Band // "Born Into Trouble as the Sparks Fly Upward."
"Born Into Trouble as the Sparks Fly Upward." The Silver Mt. Zion Memorial Orchestra & Tra-La-La Band 2001, Constellation (Bandcamp)
22 years ago Montreal’s other iconic prodigiously-membered post-rock band released their second LP. It’s not easy keeping all of these pro-Zion-but-not-Zionists straight, so I’ve helpfully listed and ranked each of the musicians who have passed through this constantly shifting collective from first to least-first. Let’s go!
Members of A/The/e Silver Mt. Zion Memorial Orchestra & Tra-La-La Band, Ranked
1. Mike Garson - piano 2. Annie Clark - guitar, keyboards, backing vocals 3. Brian Teasley- percussion 4. Daniel Hart - violin 5. Szabolcs Szczur – accordion 6. Davey 'Crabsticks' Trotter – Mellotron 7. Timothy Matthews – mbira 8. Buffi Jacobs – cello 9. Bach Norwood – piano, keyboards, backing vocals 10. Harriet Ballance - triangle, backing vocals 11. Japhy Ryder – floristry 12. Stuart "Peebs" Peebles – piccolo 13. Chandler Petrino – natural horn, oboe 14. Jared Pechonis – theremin 15. Toby Halbrooks - theremin 16. Corn Mo - backing vocals 17. Patrick Hewitt – theremin 18. Darin Hieb – trumpet, backing vocals 19. Rachel Woolf – flute 20. Mark Beardsworth – claviola 21. Allen Halas – percussion 22. Edwin Mendoza – viola 23. Todd Beaupré – vibraslap 24. Thaddeus Ford – trumpet 25. Paul Deemer – trombone, trumpet 26. Mike St.Clair – trombone, synth effects 27. Josh Guyer – trombone, spoons 28. Chris Curiel – trumpet 29. Heather Test – French horn 30. Victoria Arellano – classical harp 31. Sean Redman – violin, mandolin 32. Kelly Test – percussion 33. Mike Mordecai – percussion 34. Jason Garner – drums 35. Audrey Easley – flute, piccolo, EWI 36. Rick G. Nelson – viola 37. Nick Groesch – piano, keyboards 38. Keith Hendricks – percussion 39. Evan Hisey – keyboards 40. Dylan Silvers – guitar 41. Daniel Hart – violin 42. John Lamonica – percussion 43. Marcus Lopez – percussion 44. Matt Bricker – trumpet, synth effects 45. Taylor Young – percussion 46. Joe Butcher – steel drum 47. Evan Jacobs – piano, keyboards 48. Todd Berridge – viola 49. Nick Earl – guitar 50. Evan Weiss – trumpet 51. Jay Jennings – trumpet 52. Tamara Brown – violin 53. Merritt Lota – steel drums 54. Daniel Huffman – guitar 55. Timothy Blowers – harp 56. Anthony Richards – steel drums 57. Louis Schwadron – French horn 58. Andrew Tinker – French horn 59. Nick Wlodarczyk – trombone 60. Paul Gaughran – flute 61. Isabelo Cruz – French horn 62. Bryan Wakeland – drums 63. Hayley McCarthy – viola 64. Dave Dusters – percussion, backing vocals 65. Billy Mills-Curran – flute 66. Logan Keese – trumpet 67. Ricky Rasura – classical harp 68. Tonya Hewitt – banjo 69. Daniel Poorman – slide whistle 70. Andy Parkerson – clarinet 71. Joseph Singleton – viola 72. Jenelle Valencia – violin 73. James Reimer – trombone 74. Regina Chellew – guitar, trumpet, backing vocals 75. Ryan Fitzgerald – guitar, backing vocals 76. Cory Helms – guitar, backing vocals 77. Jessica Jordan – backing vocals 78. Jenny Kirtland – backing vocals 79. Kristin Hardin – backing vocals 80. Elizabeth Evans – backing vocals 81. Neil Smith – backing vocals 82. Julie Doyle – backing vocals 83. Christine Bolon – backing vocals 84. Natalie Young – backing vocals 85. Constance Dolph – backing vocals 86. Elizabeth Brown – backing vocals 87. Apotsala Wilson – backing vocals 88. Jennie Kelley – backing vocals 89. Roy Thomas Ivy – backing vocals 90. Jamey Welch – backing vocals 91. Ethan Voelkers – backing vocals 92. Mark Pirro - bass 93. Frank Benjaminsen – backing vocals 94. Stephanie Dolph – backing vocals 95. Jennifer Jobe – backing vocals 96. Mike Elio – backing vocals 97. Kelly Repka – backing vocals 98. Jason Rees – backing vocals 99. Jeneffa Soldatic – backing vocals 100. Michael Turner – backing vocals 101. Don Congeler – backing vocals 102. Michael Musick – backing vocals 103. Melissa Crutchfield – backing vocals 104. Sandra Powers Giasson – backing vocals 105. Paul Hillery – backing vocals 106. Stephen Dix – backing vocals 107. Jessica Berridge – backing vocals 108. Melisma MacDonald – backing vocals 109. Ross Cink - backing vocals 110. Lucy Williams - choreography 111. Josh David Jordan – backing vocals 112. Brad Butler – backing vocals 113. Jason Rees – backing vocals 114. Andrew Aldenenotti – backing vocals 115. Getting hit by a bus wearing a flowing white robe 116. Tim DeLaughter - vocals, guitar, piano
Hold on. I’ve just received word that these musicians are actually members of some other band? Apologies for the confusion!
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157/365
#backing vocals#a silver mt. zion#efrim manuel menuck#defector#this is so stupid#montreal music#'00s music#post-rock#underexplained lists#music review#vinyl record#montreal
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Vanderbilt: 2024 Birmingham Bowl Champions
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. -- — Diego Pavia and Vanderbilt delivered another victory to end a surprising season.
Pavia threw three touchdown passes and ran for two more scores and Vanderbilt secured its first winning season since 2013 with a 35-27 victory over Georgia Tech on Friday in the Birmingham Bowl.
The Commodores (7-6) capped the year with another big game from Pavia, a New Mexico State transfer whose gritty play helped lead a huge turnaround from a 2-10 season.
“This is just a stepping stone of what we want to do here at Vanderbilt,” Pavia said. “We’ve got bigger dreams.”
Pavia accounted for three of his scores in a six-minute span starting late in the third quarter before Georgia Tech (7-6) rallied. A lightning delay with 7:17 left only pushed back the celebration of the Commodores' first bowl win since that 9-4 season 11 years ago.
“That was a tough fight and I knew it wasn’t going to be easy and the weather delay added a layer that we had to overcome,” Vandy coach Clark Lea said.
Pavia, the game MVP, completed 13 of 21 passes for 160 yards and gained 84 yards on 17 rushes. He had a 7-yard touchdown pass to Quincy Skinner Jr. and a 6-yard scoring run in the fourth quarter. Afterward, he announced his plans to return to Vandy next season, with the caveat that Lea and staffers like Jerry Kill come back.
Georgia Tech's Haynes King tried to bring his team back from a 35-13 deficit with a 9-yard touchdown pass to Jamal Haynes with 5:03 left and a 2-yarder to Bailey Stockton at the 1:30 mark. Both onside kick attempts failed.
“I thought the character of our team showed with the final seven minutes of the game, how they fought through adversity and continued to play until the end of the game," Georgia Tech coach Brent Key said.
King was 25-of-33 passing for 204 yards with three touchdowns and an interception. Haynes carried 17 times for 136 yards and had five catches for 32 yards.
The Commodores went ahead 21-13 on Pavia's 3-yard touchdown pass to Eli Stowers with 56 seconds left in the third quarter in a drive filled with fireworks.
Key was flagged for unsportsmanlike conduct protesting a pass interference call on the drive. It came after a non-call on what he thought was a kick catch interference that had buried the Yellow Jackets at their 2.
“There was dialogue and we have to control what we can control as a football team,” Key said.
Then, Tech was flagged for defensive holding and both teams were penalized for unsportsmanlike conduct after a scuffle on Vandy's sideline. The Yellow Jackets also had a roughing the kicker call on the extra point.
King then threw only his second interception of the season and CJ Taylor returned it 22 yards to the 11. Pavia was called for unsportsmanlike conduct after flipping the ball into the stands following a run but still produced a 3-yard touchdown to Eli Stowers.
“I don't know that there was a more perfect person to quarterback this team and to quarterback this program,” Lea said. "This is a chip on the shoulder program."
Takeaways
Georgia Tech: Had eight penalties for 90 yards and two turnovers that both led to touchdowns. The Yellow Jackets had already lost two key players to the transfer portal, edge rusher Romello Heights (Texas Tech) and leading receiver Eric Singleton Jr. (Auburn)
Vanderbilt: Staged a big turnaround in Lea's fourth season a year after going 0-8 in Southeastern Conference games last season. Lea retooled the staff and brought in players like Pavia, and it paid off.
“We've come a long way in 12 months,” Lea said.
Up next
Vandy's prospects for next season got brighter when a federal judge cleared the way for Pavia to return for another season, pending an NCAA appeal. Georgia Tech's King also can come back.
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Some of my personal all time favourite films:
Man Of The West (1958, Anthony Mann)
Scarlet Street (1945, Fritz Lang)
Ran (1985, Akira Kurosawa)
The Strawberry Blonde (1941, Raoul Walsh)
Strangers On A Train (1951, Alfred Hitchcock)
The Evil Dead (1981, Sam Riami)
The Mask Of Zorro (1998, Martin Campbell)
Love & Basketball (2000, Gina Prince-Bythewood)
The Gunfighter (1950, Henry King)
Straw Dogs (1971, Sam Peckinpah)
The People Under The Stairs (1991, Wes Craven)
Candyman (1992, Bernard Rose)
Deathdream (1974, Bob Clark)
The Babadook (2014, Jennifer Kent)
Christine (1983, John Carpenter)
Day Of The Dead (1985, George Romero)
The Prestige (2006, Christopher Nolan)
The Stepfather (1987, Joseph Ruben)
Nightcrawler (2013, Dan Gilroy)
Whiplash (2014, Damien Chazelle)
Halloween II (2009, Rob Zombie)
Hulk (2003, Ang Lee)
Logan (2017, James Mangold)
Birds Of Prey & The Fantabolous Emancipation Of One Harley Quinn (2020, Cathy Yan)
Professor Marston & The Wonder Women (2017, Angela Robinson)
Dawn Of The Planet Of The Apes (2014, Matt Reeves)
Batman Returns (1992, Tim Burton)
Don't Torture A Duckling (1972, Lucio Fulci)
Ben-Hur (1959, William Wyler)
Barry Lyndon (1975, Stanley Kubrick)
The Mummy (1999, Stephen Sommers)
Being John Malkovich (1999, Spike Jonze)
Cult Of Chucky (2017, Don Mancini)
Bigger Than Life (1956, Nicholas Ray)
The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance (1962, John Ford)
The Invisible Man (2020, Leigh Whannell)
Mildred Pierce (1945, Michael Curtiz)
All The Real Girls (2003, David Gordon Green)
The Phenix City Story (1955, Phil Karlson)
Crime Wave (1954, Andre De Toth)
Ride Lonesome (1959, Budd Boetticher)
Baby Boy (2001, John Singleton)
Bamboozled (2000, Spike Lee)
Witchfinder General (1968, Michael Reeves)
Frankenstein Must Be Destroyed (1969, Terence Fisher)
Toy Story 2 (1999, John Lassiter, Lee Unkrich)
Dead Ringers (1988, David Cronenberg)
Pearl (2023, Ti West)
Dr Jekyll & Mr Hyde (1931, Reuben Moumalian)
Frailty (2001, Bill Paxton)
Megamind (2010, Tom McGrath)
3:10 To Yuma (1957, Delmer Daves)
Event Horizon (1997, Paul W.S. Anderson)
Breakdown (1997, Jonathan Mostow)
Starship Troopers (1997, Paul Verhoeven)
Sugar (2008, Anna Boden & Ryan Fleck)
Outland (1981, Peter Hyams)
Tarzan's Greatest Adventure (1959, John Guillerman)
Possessor (2020, Brandon Cronenberg)
Freaky (2020, Christopher Landon)
First Blood (1982, Ted Ketchoff)
A Perfect World (1993, Clint Eastwood)
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Birthdays 7.3
Beer Birthdays
Tom Kehoe (1964)
Christian Ettinger (1973)
Max Finance (1985)
Five Favorite Birthdays
Dave Barry; writer, humorist (1947)
M.F.K. Fisher; writer (1908)
Mississippi John Hurt; blues singer (1893)
Franz Kafka; Czech writer (1883)
Tom Stoppard; playwright (1937)
Famous Birthdays
Robert Adam; Scottish architect (1728)
Amalia Aguilar; Cuban-Mexican film actress and dancer (1924)
Rae Allen; actress, singer, and director (1926)
Evelyn Anthony; English author (1928)
Paul Barrere; rock guitarist (1948)
Sándor Bortnyik; Hungarian painter (1893)
Laura Branigan; rock singer (1957)
Betty Buckley; actor (1947)
Vince Clarke; English singer-songwriter, keyboard player (1960)
George M. Cohan; actor, singer, songwriter (1878)
Michael Cole; actor (1945)
Johnny Coles, American trumpeter (1926)
John Singleton Copley; artist (1738)
Richard Cramer; actor (1889)
Tom Cruise; actor (1962)
William Henry Davies; Welsh poet and writer (1871)
Lisa De Leeuw; adult actress (1958)
Jesse Douglas; mathematician (1897)
Pete Fountain; clarinetist (1930)
Andy Fraser; English singer-songwriter and bass player (1952)
Thomas Gibson; actor (1962)
Charlotte Perkins Gilman; sociologist, writer, feminist (1860)
Ramón Gómez de la Serna; Spanish author and playwright (1888)
Albert Gottschalk; Danish painter (1866)
Larry "Bozo the Clown" Harmon; clown (1925)
Charlie Higson; English actor, singer (1958)
Philip Jamison; artist (1925)
Leos Janacek; Czech composer (1854)
Elle King; singer, songwriter, and actress (1989)
Alfred Korzybski; Polish-American mathematician (1879)
Johnny Lee; singer and guitarist (1946)
Doris Lloyd; English actress (1896)
Nicholas Maxwell; English philosopher (1937)
Didier Mouron; Swiss-Canadian painter (1958)
Olivia Munn; actor, comedian (1980)
Connie Nielsen; Danish-American actor (1965)
Tim O'Connor; actor (1927)
Carla Olson; singer-songwriter (1952)
Baard Owe; Norwegian-Danish actor (1936)
Eddy Paape, Belgian illustrator (1920)
Susan Penhaligon; English actress (1949)
Stephen Pearcy; singer-songwriter, and guitarist (1959)
Ralph Barton Perry; philosopher (1876)
Susan Peters; actress (1921)
Jethro Pugh; Dallas Cowboys DT (1944)
François Reichenbach; French film director (1921)
Ken Russell; English film director (1927)
George Sanders; Russian-born British actor (1906)
Richard Mellon Scaife; businessman (1932)
Harrison Schmitt; geologist, astronaut (1935)
Ruth Crawford Seeger; composer (1901)
Michael Shea; author (1946)
Kurtwood Smith; actor (1943)
Yeardley Smith; actor (1964)
Jan Smithers; actor (1949)
Poly Styrene; British musician (1957)
Kenzie Taylor; adult actress (1990)
Tommy Tedesco; guitarist (1930)
Norman E. Thagard; astronaut (1943)
Aaron Tippin; singer-songwriter, guitarist (1958)
Guillaume Cornelis van Beverloo; Belgian artist (1922)
John Verity,; English guitarist (1949)
Johnnie Wilder, Jr.; R&B/funk singer (1949)
Montel Williams; television host (1956)
Patrick Wilson; actor (1973)
Edward Young; English poet, dramatist (1683)
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2024 Houston Astros Roster
Pitchers
#35 Justin Verlander (Goochland County, Virginia)
#39 Miguel Díaz (San Cristóbal, Dominican Republic)*
#43 Lance McCullers; Jr. (Tampa, Florida)
#47 Rafael Montero (Higuerito, Dominican Republic)
#50 Tayler Scott (Johannesburg, South Africa)*
#52 Bryan Abreu (Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic)
#53 Cristian Javier (Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic)
#55 Thomas Pressly (Irving, Texas)
#56 Ronel Blanco (Santiago De Los Caballeros, Dominican Republic)
#57 William Murfee (Nashville, Tennessee)*
#58 Hunter Brown (St. Clair Shores, Michigan)
#59 Framber Valdez (Sabana Grande De Palenque, Dom Rep)
#61 Seth Martinez (Sierra Vista, Arizona)
#62 John Sousa (Palm Beach Gardens, Florida)
#63 Oliver Ortega (Nagua, Dominican Republic)*
#64 Brandon Bielak (Sayreville, New Jersey)
#65 José Urquidy (Mazatlán, Mexico)
#66 Shawn Dubin (Allegany, New York)
#68 J.P. France (St. Charles Parish, Louisiana)
#71 Josh Hader (Anne Arundel County, Maryland)*
#77 Luis García (Ciudad Bolívar, Venezuela)
Catchers
#17 Víctor Caratini (Ciudad Coamo, Puerto Rico)*
#21 Yainer Díaz (Azua De Compostella, Dominican Republic)
Infielders
#2 Alex Bregman (Albuquerque, New Mexico)
#3 Jeremy Peña (Providence, Rhode Island)
#14 Mauricio Dubón (San Pedro Sula, Honduras)
#16 Grae Kessinger (Oxford, Mississippi)
#27 José Altuve (Maracay, Venezuela)
#28 Jon Singleton (Long Beach, California)
#79 José Abreu (Cruces, Cuba)
Outfielders
#6 Jake Meyers (Omaha, Nebraska)
#20 Chas McCormick (West Chester, Pennsylvania)
#30 Kyle Tucker (Tampa, Florida)
#44 Yordan Álvarez (Ciudad Las Tunas, Cuba)
Coaches
Manager Josue Espada (San Juan, Puerto Rico)
Bench coach Omar López (Valencia, Venezuela)
Hitting coach Alex Cintrón (Ciudad Humacao, Puerto Rico)
Assistant hitting coach Troy Snitker (Snellville, Georgia)
Pitching coach Josh Miller (Melbourne Beach, Florida)
Bullpen coach Bill Murphy (Cranford Township, New Jersey)
Bullpen catcher Javier Bracamonte (Santiago De León De Caracas)
1B coach Dave Clark (Tupelo, Mississippi)
3B coach Gary Pettis (Oakland, California)
Assistant coach Jason Bell (Houston, Texas)
Assistant coach Jason Kanzler (Penfield, New York)
Assistant coach Michael Collins (Canberra, Australia)
#Sports#Baseball#MLB#Houston Astros#Celebrities#Dominican Republic#Michigan#Louisiana#New Jersey#South Africa#Maryland#New York#Mexico#Virginia#Venezuela#Florida#Puerto Rico#Cuba#New Mexico#Honduras#Mississippi#Rhode Island#Pennsylvania#Nebraska#Texas#Australia#Georgia
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Arrest - Arrest Warrant, Possession of Heroin, And Possession of Crack Cocaine
Offenses: Arrest Warrant, Possession of Heroin, And Possession of Crack Cocaine
Incident Number: 23SF005425
Investigating Officer: Ofc. Clark, Ofc. Singleton
Date/Time of Incident/Arrest: 12/24/2023 1854
Defendant: Kannyon Fuller (DOB: 03/31/1998)
Summary of Incident:
On 12/24/2023 at approximately 1854 hours, Ofc. Clark and Ofc. Singleton observed a male on Park St believed to have an active arrest warrant. Officers made contact with the subject who was identified as Kannyon Fuller (DOB: 03/31/1998).
Kannyon was placed under arrest for his in state arrest warrant. Search of his person subsequent to his arrest he was found to be in possession of suspected heroin and suspected crack cocaine.
Kannyon was transported to the Southern State Correctional Facility where he was lodged on $500 bail. Kannyon was issued a citation to appear in Vermont Superior Court, Criminal Division, Windsor Unit, on 12/27/2023, at 1230 hours to answer for his arrest warrant.
Kannyon was issued a citation to appear in Vermont Superior Court, Criminal Division, Windsor Unit, on 02/20/2024, at 0800 hours to answer for his alleged possession of heroin and crack cocaine.
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This is what happened in sports during 2023
By Sam Joseph, CNNCNN —
none
2023 has been a year unlike any other in sport.
Records were broken, torches were passed, movements were started and tears were shed as fans experienced every emotion possible.
Here’s a look back at the biggest stories this year from all over the sporting world.
January
Sam Greene/USA Today Sports
Bills players gather as an ambulance parks on the field at Paycor Stadium, while CPR is administered to Hamlin. The game was suspended with suspended in the first quarter.
11th: Hamlin is discharged from hospital.
28th: Aryna Sabalenka wins the women’s singlesat the Australian Open.
Darrian Traynor/Getty Images
Djokovic celebrates after winning in Melbourne.
February
1st: Tom Brady announces his retirement from football for the second time.
6th: The Brooklyn Nets trade Kyrie Irving to the Dallas Mavericks.
Andrew D. Bernstein/NBAE via Getty Images
James fades away to make NBA history.
9th: The Brooklyn Nets trade Kevin Durant to the Phoenix Suns.
11th: Real Madrid wins the Club World Cup.
12th: The Kansas City Chiefs beat the Philadelphia Eagles 38-35 in Super Bowl LVII.
March
4th: The NBA begins an investigation into Memphis Grizzlies point guard Ja Morant after a video emerges of him displaying a gun at a Colorado nightclub.
17th: Three people finish the Barkley Marathonsfor only the second time in the 37-year history of the ultra-race.
Paul Sancya/AP
FDU guard Grant Singleton shoots during one of the all-time March Madness upsets.
21st: Japan wins the 2023 World Baseball Classicwith Shohei Ohtani winning tournament MVP.
April
Kevin Jairaj/USA Today Sports via Reuters
Reese gestures to Clark during the game.
3rd: World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) and Endeavor (the majority owner of the UFC) announce that the two companies will merge.
6th: European champion England beats South American champion Brazil on penalties, 1-1 (4-2) to win the first ever Women’s Finalissima.
9th: Spaniard Jon Rahm wins the Masters.
Oli Scarff/AFP via Getty Images
Welcome to Wrexham - striker Elliot Lee celebrates during the match that confirmed his team's promotion to the Football League.
26th: The Green Bay Packers trade Aaron Rodgers to the New York Jets.
Matt York/AP
Griner fights back tears at the news conference.
May
14th: Ja Morant is suspended by the Grizzliesafter being seen with a gun for a second time, this time on Instagram Live. He would later be suspended without pay by the NBA for 25 games.
20th: Manchester City wins the Premier League.
Mateo Villalba/Quality Sport Images/Getty Images
Vinícius was visibly upset during the match.
June
3rd: Manchester City wins the FA Cup, defeating bitter rival Manchester United 2-1 in the final.
6th: PGA Tour and Saudi-backed LIV Golf announce that they will merge.
10th: Iga Świątek wins the women’s singles at the French Open.
Catherine Ivill/Getty Images
Rúben Dias and the Manchester City squad celebrate their historic treble.
11th: Novak Djokovic wins the French Open and becomes the all-time leader in men’s grand slam titles.
Jack Dempsey/Pool/Getty Images
Denver's Bruce Brown drives to the basket in Game Five.
13th: The Vegas Golden Knights win their first Stanley Cup in only their sixth NHL season, beating the Florida Panthers in five games.
22nd: French teenage sensation Victor Wembanyama is selected first overall by the San Antonio Spurs in the 2023 NBA Draft.
July
Sam Navarro/USA Today Sports
Messi celebrates after scoring a 94th minute game-winning free kick against Cruz Azul, only six days after signing.
15th: Markéta Vondroušová wins the women’s singles at Wimbledon, the first to do so as an unseeded player.
Patrick Smith/Getty Images
Alcaraz lifts the trophy on the Centre Court Balcony.
24th: Bronny James, son of NBA legend LeBron James, suffers a cardiac arrest while at USC basketball practice.
August
6th: The USWNT is knocked out of the Women’s World Cup on penalties by Sweden in Megan Rapinoe’s final international match.
15th: Soccer superstar Neymar Jr. signs for Saudi Arabian club Al-Hilal, the highest profile name amongst a slew of international players to move to the burgeoning Saudi Pro League.
20th: Spain win the Women’s World Cup for the first time, defeating England 1-0 in the final.
20th: Royal Spanish Football Federation President Luis Rubiales is accused of multiple instances of inappropriate behavior after Spain’s victory, most notably forcibly kissing midfielder Jennifer Hermoso during the trophy ceremony.
Patrick Smith/Getty Images
Richardson celebrates with the flag after being crowned world champion.
24th: Magnus Carlsen defeats 18-year-old Rameshbabu Praggnanandhaa to become Chess World Cup champion.
25th: Rubiales defiantly refuses to resign at a press conference and condemns the rise of “fake feminism.”
25th: Spain midfielder Alexia Putellas posts on X (formerly Twitter) in support of Hermoso and kickstarts the #SeAcabó (#It’sOver in English) social movement.
Ezra Shaw/Getty Images
Biles competes in the uneven bars on day four of the championships.
September
Mike Segar/Reuters
Gauff kisses the trophy after claiming victory at Flushing Meadows.
10th: Novak Djokovic wins the men’s singles at the US Open.
10th: Luis Rubiales resigns as RFEF president but does not offer an apology in his statement.
Elsa/Getty Images
Rodgers is sacked by the Bills' Leonard Floyd at MetLife Stadium - injuring him only four plays into his New York career.
David Eulitt/Getty Images
Swift, the girlfriend of Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce and the world's most famous football fan, watches on at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City.
27th: The Portland Trail Blazers trade Damian Lillard to the Milwaukee Bucks.
October
1st: Damar Hamlin returns to the Bills active roster.
6th: Simone Biles wins her sixth all-around world gymnastics title in Antwerp, Belgium, to solidify her status as the greatest gymnast ever. She would end up winning four golds at the event, taking her to 23 world titles – the most in men’s or women’s gymnastics history.
ANP/Getty Images
Verstappen celebrates after winning the Qatar Grand Prix - he had already sealed the World Championship the day before in the sprint race.
16th: The IOC announces that flag football, baseball/softball, cricket, lacrosse and squashwill be included at the 2028 Olympic Games in Los Angeles.
18th: The Las Vegas Aces win the WNBA Finals 3-1 against the New York Liberty, becoming the first repeat WNBA champions in 21 years.
28th: South Africa wins the Rugby World Cup with a 12-11 victory over New Zealand.
Ben Booth/SOPA Images/Shutterstock
Tributes to Johnson are laid outside the Motorpoint Arena in Nottingham, England.
30th: Luis Rubiales is banned from all soccer-related activities for three years by FIFA.
30th: Lionel Messi wins a record-extending eighth Ballon d’Or award.
30th: Police confirm that they are investigatingAdam Johnson’s death.
November
Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images
The Rangers celebrate after taking Game Five on the road at Chase Field.
1st: The Philadelphia 76ers trade James Hardento the Los Angeles Clippers.
6th: Iga Świątek wins WTA Finals and regains the world No. 1 ranking after thrashing Jessica Pegula, 6-1 6-0.
19th: Max Verstappen wins the inaugural Las Vegas Grand Prix.
Andrew Boyers/Reuters
Australia's Glenn Maxwell celebrates after winning the Cricket World Cup.
19th: Novak Djokovic wins the ATP Finals, defeating Jannik Sinner with ease, 6-3 6-3.
Tracy Wilcox/PGA TOUR via Getty Images
Woods tees off at the Hero World Challenge in Nassau, Bahamas.
December
3rd: Florida State, undefeated in the regular season, is controversially left out of the College Football Playoff.
7th: Jon Rahm announces that he is leaving the PGA Tour to join LIV Golf.
9th: Shohei Ohtani announces that he is signing with the Los Angeles Dodgers, reportedly on a 10-year, $700 million contract, the largest deal in professional sports history.
Mark J. Rebilas/USA Today Sports via Reuters
Nurkić lies on the ground hurt while Green reacts after being whistled for a foul.
21st: The EU’s top court decides that FIFA and UEFA’s rules which blocked the creation of the controversial European Super League were unlawful, potentially removing obstacle for the controversial soccer competition to be established.
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Helen Clarke, 77, dies after sustaining significant burns and a head injury in a car fire.
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Con un partido más que juegue llegará a 2.778 y dejará atrás al extoletero cubano EDUARDO CHAPELLIN Miguel Cabrera empató con su hit 3.152 a Paul Warner en la casilla 16 de todos los tiempos en las Grandes Ligas. Ahora su próxima meta es el también Salón de la Fama, George Brett, quien con 3.154, ligados todos por el exbateador zurdo con Reales de Kansas City, ocupa el renglón 17. Si mantiene el ritmo puede alcanzar a Adrián Beltré (3.166) y Carl Ripken (3.184), quien ocupa la casilla quince de todos los tiempos. Y además en juegos jugados empató al cubano Tony (Atanasio) Pérez (2.777) en el 27, pero tiene cerca a Alex Rodríguez (2.784) y Tris Speaker (2.789), como posibles a superar en su año de despedida. En anotadas sigue con 1.545, empatado con Max Carey en la casilla 57 y a “pata e´mingo” tiene a Reggie Jackson (1.551) En extrabases está en el decimoquinto puesto en los anales de MLB con 1.148 y con dos más alcanza al dominicano Adrián Beltré (1.151). Con un jonrón nivela con Salón de la Fama Mel Ott (511) el puesto 25 de por vida. También empatará el segundo lugar de por vida en Tigres de Detroit con Norm Cash (373), siendo el líder Al Kaline (399). Y con par de dobletes empareja el escalón trece con Hank Aaron (624). En boletos sigue a dos Rusty Staub (1.255), siendo Jack Clark (1.262) y Ken Singleton (1.263), los más que están a su alcance. El compatriota ya había llegado la semana pasada a 1.872 remolcadas, para así adueñarse del lugar once en los anales del juego, desplazando al citado Mel Ott (1.868). Después de comenzar muy lento esta campaña (estuvo por debajo de los .200 puntos por varias semanas), recibió una ración de banco, pero luego explotó teniendo un promedio sobre los .300 en los dos recientes meses. “Estoy siendo agresivo. Me mantengo agresivo y busco buenos pitcheos para golpearlos. La idea es mantener las cosas simples en el home”, ha reflexionado varias veces en los medios de comunicación. Para recibir en tu celular esta y otras informaciones, únete a nuestras redes sociales, síguenos en Instagram, Twitter y Facebook como @DiarioElPepazo El Pepazo/Líder
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